Friday, September 28, 2012

Why should you as an author
care? Your books probably will never be banned. Right?

The freedom to write and publish
without censure is a gift to you from those who have worked hard to protect the
rights of all writers. The authors of the Bill of Rights. The ACLU. And, yes,
librarians. Those be-bunned creatures have protected your rights for decades.
They didn’t have to love your work or even want to read it, but they understood
that if censors were able to ban one book, all were in danger. They stood up in
their libraries and in courtrooms.

As I wrote The Shapeshifters’
Library I reflected upon the freedom to read and the freedom to publish and what
I, as a librarian, always took for granted. I incorporated the problems of
libraries into a fantasy where noble dog-shifters protect knowledge from
book-burning werewolves in a small Ohio town. I speculated on the many ways the
werewolves among us have tried to curtail our knowledge. It became clear that
banning and burning are pretty much the same thing. If a book is unavailable,
it’s ideas are gone. If it never gets published, it’s unavailable.

Enter “Fifty Shades of Grey”
into this year’s censorship discussions of what should be ripped from shelves
and chained in the library’s basement. In a small library bookclub I facilitate,
I asked a group of senior citizen-readers if they planned to read the book. We
had a great discussion. One of the best comments was from a woman who said she
would read it because she wanted to be able to discuss it with her
grandchildren.

Recently the San Francisco
Public Library installed 18 privacy screens on computer terminals to shield from
others what one person sees on the internet, be it porn or someone’s idea of
porn.

Librarians don’t judge the
reason you want to read. But they do have policies detailing their individual
library book selection policy. Public money can’t be stretched to buy everything
published. (Remember that when you expect a library to buy your book or accept a
donated copy.)

Celebrate Banned Book Week by
reading a banned book. Check out these lists of the Top Ten Challenged Books for the years 2001 through
2011. I bet you find a couple of your favorites.

Visit your local public library
and see what’s changed. Support your local library. And love your
librarian.

Full disclosure: I have an MLS
and have selected books for a public library. And I’ve listened to the first
third of “Fifty Shades of Grey” in audiobook.

***

Amber
Polo has
had a lifelong love of libraries. A fascination with ancient libraries and
curiosity about why werewolves outnumbered dog-shifters in literature inspired
her new urban fantasy series The
Shapeshifters' Libraryfilled with librarian
dog-shifters.

Would you like to participate in
Friday "Speak
Out!"? Email your short posts
(under 500 words) about women and writing to: marcia[at]wow-womenonwriting[dot]com
for consideration. We look forward to hearing from you!

Why aren't books rated as movies are. It would sure help me know what my teenager was reading when I don't have time to read it too. There are scary misleading information hidden in books. At least this list gives me a place to start to keep my younger kids from. Banning books, in my opinion, from libraries does not keep those who want it from buying them. I think it is a good thing to keep specific things from libraries. If we don't try and safeguard what are kids have access to then they will be snatched by those who would rather mold their minds for a product like porn. Thanks to all awesome librarians who understand this.

When books like "Leaves of Grass" and "Little Red Riding Hood" have been censored, we think censorship can be trivialized. Check out the recent Idaho challenge for "Like Water for Chocolate." These parents need to check to see if "Fifty Shades..." is on their kids' phones.

I started reading novels before I was in primary grades in school. I would lug piles of books home with each visit to the library. Research, nature, animals, the Holocaust, the evil of the Nazi regime. All these I read. By the time In the 1950's, I discovered "banned books" at the library. Gee whiz? What were these books? Jack London and Ernest Hemmingway had books that were only available if you signed them out with permission from parents. So, that was easy. Off I went with "For Whom The Bells Tolled, Call of the Wild, White Fang, Lord of the Flies" and lots of other reads. I found out about man's inhumanity to man. I learned about the wrongness of "Manifest Destiny", racism, sexism, homophobia, xenophobia, and the importance of the written word. Believe half of what you read but dig further was the core of my reading.I soon challenged organized religion because it rarely did the things I believed we were obligated to do as travelers on this earthship we all share a ride on. Banning books amounts to narrowing one's ability to seek truth. Sometimes fiction is just that, an escape from reality. I learned which kinds of fiction were part of my imagination that was beneficial and which was unacceptable for my mores. I did not need someone else to comb through my mind for me. I have been against banned books since I first started to read. I will always fight the banning of the written word.